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The Clippers’ chaotic unravelling leaves Chris Paul as its most painful casualty

about 6 hours ago
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Pull out your Los Angeles Clippers bingo cards,Anyone have the square marked “owner and star player accused of skirting the salary cap through improper means”? Go ahead and stamp that one,How about “losing 14 of 16 after a hopeful 3-2 start”? Mark it,And yes, you can fill in “other star averaging nearly 27 a night at age 36 – including a 50-piece against the Detroit Pistons, one of the league’s best teams”,The box reading “Clippers fans tearing out their hair at alarming rates and contemplating shameful, fairweather defections” is probably safe to cross off, pending review.

And after the wee-hours media cycle on Wednesday morning, everyone gets to tick the most dispiriting square of all: “beloved, decorated veteran unceremoniously kicked to the curb in his final season”.The Clippers had posted a winning record every year since 2010-11, building a reputation as one of the NBA’s most reliable playoff fixtures.Twenty-one games into this young season, that identity has dissolved into something hazy around the edges – and unmistakably sinister.The decorated vet in question is 40-year-old Chris Paul, who posted via an Instagram story that the Clippers were sending him home from their ongoing road trip.Lawrence Frank, the Clippers’ president of basketball operations, confirmed the news in a statement to ESPN: “We are parting ways with Chris, and he will no longer be a part of the team.

” Frank added of Paul, amidst bland platitudes of his status as a Clippers icon, “I want to make one thing very clear.No one is blaming Chris for our underperformance.” Clearly.Paul joined the Clippers in 2011 and helped launch their long run of winning seasons before departing in 2017.(His eventual trade to Houston brought back seven players, a protected 2018 first-round pick and the better part of a million dollars.

) In LA he averaged 18.8 points and 9.8 assists, made three All-NBA first teams and turned the franchise into Lob City with those feathered lobs to Blake Griffin and DeAndre Jordan – finally giving a long-moribund club both identity and excitement.He stole the ball so relentlessly he mangled his own fingers, his gnarled digits earning a feature in the New York Times.People called him the “Point God”.

He’ll be a first-ballot Hall of Famer, all while standing just six feet tall.He never won a championship, making only the one NBA Finals appearance with the Phoenix Suns in 2021, but his Clippers years earned him enormous acclaim.Which is why returning in 2025 clearly meant so much – Paul accepted a reserve role for one last season, and the fans embraced the homecoming just as deeply.The honeymoon didn’t last very long.Time dulls even the sharpest skills, however intact the instincts remain.

Paul averaged just over 14 minutes and three points a game in his return,And, according to ESPN’s style-challenged scoop machine Shams Charania, he had been “vocal in holding management, coaches and players accountable, which the team felt became disruptive”, even going weeks without speaking to Tyronn Lue,Was Paul truly so irritating that exile was the only option, or is management flailing for answers amid a grisly run of results? For anyone who thought injury was the only potential snag in this feelgood reunion, consider this a reminder: losing opens every old wound,What began as a heartwarming final-season subplot has now ended abruptly and awkwardly,It only makes the Clippers – tied with the tragic Sacramento Kings for second-last in the West (thank god for the Pelicans, somehow worse than both) – look even more dysfunctional.

Tell a new NBA fan, or an alien, that this team went life and death with Nikola Jokić’s imperious Denver Nuggets in last season’s playoffs and they’d stare back in confusion.Only the 4-17 Indiana Pacers, a game away from the NBA Finals trophy six months ago, have fallen harder.At least they can blame a brutal run of injuries.As for Paul? His career will remain broadly respected and fondly remembered, this unfortunate final chapter aside.The one lingering regret is the obvious one: the missing championship.

Sentiment surely played a role in his decision to return, but so did the chance – however slim – to chase that elusive Larry O’Brien trophy with a team that looked strong last spring.He won’t be winning with the Clippers now.And unless their early-season collapse is some grand basketball mirage, they won’t be winning without him either.
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Women’s prisons report finds 97 deaths in decade as self-harm hits record high

Over the past decade 97 women have died in prisons in England and Wales and incidents of self-harm among female prisoners have reached the highest level on record, a report has found.Inquest, the charity that produced the report, collated Ministry of Justice (MoJ) figures since 2015 to arrive at a total number of deaths. It said the numbers were evidence for its case that all women’s prisons should be closed.The deaths analysed by the report include those of Saria Hart, 26, who passed officers two suicide notes before taking her own life; Louisa Boultbee, 49, who had epilepsy and was found unresponsive in her cell after an apparent seizure, with two mandatory checks having been missed; and Aisha Cleary, a newborn baby whose 18-year-old mother gave birth alone in her cell despite pressing her cell bell twice.Inquest’s director, Deborah Coles, said: “The only certainty is that more deaths will follow unless the government radically changes direction

about 12 hours ago
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Leaked report reveals culture of bullying and harassment at scandal-hit NHS hospital

A culture of systemic bullying and harassment has been allowed to flourish among staff at one England’s most scandal-hit hospitals, a damning leaked report reveals.The safety of patients at Blackpool Victoria hospital was affected as a result of the failings, the report by the Royal College of Physicians (RCP) found.The report was provided to leaders at the Blackpool teaching hospitals NHS trust in January but its findings were not shared widely with staff until 10 months later, prompting concerns that employees’ ability to take urgent action on its 19 recommendations was compromised.Staff who spoke to the RCP inquiry team said that excessive workloads were handed to inexperienced doctors, leaving them fatigued and stressed while treating patients. They described a “keeping your head down culture” where their concerns were inadequately addressed

about 12 hours ago
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Having a dog can boost teenagers’ mental health, say scientists

Having a dog in the home could help boost teenagers’ mental health, research suggests, with scientists adding this could in part be down to the sharing of microbes.Prof Takefumi Kikusui, of Azabu University in Japan, who led the work, said being with dogs could reduce owners’ stress and stimulate the release of the bonding hormone oxytocin.But the research suggests there could be other reasons pooches may have a positive influence.“Several studies have reported the mental health benefits of dog ownership, and we have demonstrated that the microbiome may be one mechanism involved,” Kikusui said.Writing in the journal iScience, Kikusui and colleagues report how they analysed survey results from 343 mentally and physically healthy adolescents who participated in the Tokyo Teenager Cohort Study, of whom 96 were dog owners

about 13 hours ago
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Labour proposed in opposition how to introduce assisted dying via private member’s bill

Labour proposed while in opposition how to introduce assisted dying via a private member’s bill, suggesting that would still allow “heavy influence” for the government in the process, a leaked document has revealed.The document, seen by the Guardian, proposed a change strikingly similar to the private member’s bill put forward eventually by the Labour MP Kim Leadbeater – to limit the change in the law to those who are “mentally competent, terminally ill and have a prognosis of less than six months left to live”.The leak will raise fresh questions over how much government control there has been behind Leadbeater’s bill and comes ahead of a major battle in the House of Lords continuing this Friday, where many opposing peers have tabled hundreds of amendments for debate, which has been seen by some as an effort to filibuster the bill.Because of the number of amendments, ten more sitting days have been assigned to debate but those on the pro-side still fear it will run out of time in the parliamentary session and have been holding private talks in an effort to persuade peers not to tie up the bill using parliamentary tactics.A Labour source opposed to the bill said the leak exposed “a shadow policymaking process, outside of the Labour manifesto, and with no consultation with MPs, unions or members, that sought to evade scrutiny on an issue of huge importance”

about 13 hours ago
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What to know when the ban on most US hemp products goes into effect

Ban set to be enforced in November 2026 will change pricing, availability and composition of productsCongress voted to ban most hemp-derived products last month in a last-minute addition to the spending bill that ended the government shutdown. The ban, set to be enforced in November 2026, will change the pricing, availability and composition of some of the most popular hemp-derived products on the market, like CBD tinctures and balms and THC drinks.Here’s what you need to know.It depends on what state you live in. Jonathan Miller, general counsel for US Hemp Roundtable, says that states that have passed laws to allow regulated, legal hemp, the market will probably continue to operate similarly to state-level recreational and medical cannabis markets

about 17 hours ago
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Scott Galloway on the masculinity crisis: ‘I worry we are evolving a new breed of asexual, asocial males’

When his book Notes on Being a Man was released last month, it raced to the top of the bestseller lists. The US author, tech entrepreneur and podcaster explains his theories on dating, crying – and the rise of Donald TrumpIt takes balls to title your book Notes on Being a Man. And, superficially, Scott Galloway could easily be lumped in with a dozen other manosphere-friendly alpha-bros promising to teach young men how to find their inner wolf. He is, after all, a wealthy, healthy, white, heterosexual, shaven-headed, 61-year-old Californian who made his name and fortune as a successful investor and podcaster.But in reality, he is almost the opposite: liberal, left-leaning and surprisingly sensitive

about 24 hours ago
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Advertising giant WPP relegated from FTSE 100 after nearly 30 years

about 10 hours ago
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Post Office avoids fine over leak of wrongfully convicted operators’ names

about 12 hours ago
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Hundreds of Australians complain of wrongful social media account closures but ombudsman can’t help

about 6 hours ago
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Doom, gloom … and Belle Gibson? The top Google searches in Australia in 2025

about 10 hours ago
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Australia v England: Ashes second Test, day one – live

about 1 hour ago
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Rory McIlroy mania hits Melbourne as fans skip school and work on ‘special day’ | Jack Snape

about 4 hours ago